Salon is reporting that the February 15 peace protests may end up looking like Antiques Road Show in comparison to what’s planned for the day war breaks out in Iraq. Different organizations are planning to shut down financial districts, stage sit-ins in Congressional offices, and even disrupt the Air Force’s command and control center. The rationale is to make it as difficult as possible for the White House to carry out the war.
But Anti-Vietnam peace activist Paul Berman had this to say:
“At the time I did some of that myself and thought it was doing good, but now it’s apparent to me that all that stuff just fell into a trap laid by Richard Nixon,” he says. “That kind of stuff allowed Nixon to win in 1968 and again in 1972, and a Democratic president would surely have withdrawn sooner. And so in effect, although it’s painful to say so, I think that kind of stuff had the effect of prolonging the war. It played into Nixon’s hands. There were famous scenes where Nixon specifically ordered that his entourage drive through streets where he knew he’d be attacked by demonstrators because he wanted the right scenes to appear on TV. He presented it to the public: You had to choose between Richard Nixon or some long-haired marijuana-smoking lunatic communist. Guess what. The public chose Nixon.”
The protests I have seen so far in Atlanta have been small, sincere, peaceful, quaint, and encouraging. Like many others, I “honked for peace” as I drove past. I made out several families protesting together. I judged them to be a symbolic marker of much larger wells of opposition and hesitance to a Gulf War II, views expressed in the massive worldwide protests I saw on TV. They reminded “the rest of us” on our way home where we stood and what that meant.
If day-of US peace protests turn violent, that political capital will be spent. All CNN needs is one three-second clip of “some long-haired marijuana-smoking lunatic communist” doing something stupid and violent, and then to play it over and over and over. (In slow motion, no doubt.) Americans who are merely hesitant to go to war (and not in decided opposition) will find themselves with a new hesitation: this time about the peace movement. Given a choice between hesitant support of a White House at war and “some long-haired marijuana-smoking lunatic communist,” most will choose the White House. When Americans’ lives are on the line, they will easily side with President Cowboy over Hacky-Sack Hippy With a Violent Streak.
If you’re going to play politics, you may as well play to win. And to win in America, you have to carry the center. The down side of having such an enormous peace movement already (before the war has even started) is that there will inevitably be some bad eggs from the get-go. To counter this, the peace movement must do whatever it can beforehand to shut these folks out of the process, and then disavow them if and when they choose violence over peaceful protest. If the American public can see an easy division between the “good protesters” and the “bad protesters,” it won’t feel so forced to choose between a violent Bush and violent hippies. Why not give them a genuinely peaceful protest movement instead?
To quote a writer I don’t ordinarily put much stock in, “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” Disrupting military operations will not win the day. Winning over the hearts and minds of the American public will.
Hi Chutney:
On Netscape your blog suddenly appears wonky. Everything is crammed into the leftmost 1.5″. Or have you given up most of your blog real estate for Lent?
Arghgh. Netscape and it’s wonderful CSS support… At least it shows up mostly right in Opera… I guess I’ll have to start building it over from scratch.
For Peaceful Protest
“HT” Myirony : If you’re going to play politics, you may as well play to win.
For Peaceful Protest
“HT” Myirony : If you’re going to play politics, you may as well play to win.
chutney,
Apparently you are not a Vietnam vet so I was wondering if you may have have had any friends, relatives or neighbors maimed or wounded over there in “Little America. If so you the rest of the war protesters and especially the biased news media along with hanoi jane should be very proud because you can claim some of the responsibilty with out ever firing a shot.
As for President Richard Nixon he was a hero to us to us so called “baby killers” who served there. The reason being is that we could not understand why we not allowed to shut off the dink’s supply routes by going into Cambodia and Laos and thus end the war, sorry, conflict in Vietnam. President Nixon authorized us to go into Cambodia as a result the war, er conflict, in III Corp were I was at essentially came ot an end. So much so in fact that our unit was gutted and most of us were reassigned elsewere in country. You should have heard the cheers form the troops when they were told what was happening in Cambodia.
It would be nice to know how much longer the conflict lasted because of the dissent in the states which atttributed to low US troop morale and encouraged the Vietcong and NVA to keep fighting. One prisoner captured in War Zone D had nothing but moldy rice cakes to eat but he did have a picture of jane fonda in hanoi. Apparently his superiors believed that it was more important to keep up his morale than to give the poor s.o.b. a decent meal.
Think about the American casualties that you and all the rest of your chickenshit protesters are responsible for a while. Then I hope you lose as much sleep over it for the 34 years as I have. Also please apologize to the parents of those you helped eliminate by your actions back then.
Cheers